Seed of the Future: Yosemite and the Evolution of the National Park Idea

Seed of the Future: Yosemite and the Evolution of the National Park Idea

by Dayton Duncan
Seed of the Future: Yosemite and the Evolution of the National Park Idea

Seed of the Future: Yosemite and the Evolution of the National Park Idea

by Dayton Duncan

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Overview

It's now a given that Americans—and people the world over—would seek to preserve their sacred, special places. One hundred fifty years ago, however, it was definitely not a foregone conclusion that the awe-inspiring granite cliffs, astounding waterfalls, and sublime sequoias of Yosemite would be protected. This idea of preservation was the national park idea; an idea that started from a seed, a seed that was planted in Yosemite. It was through the efforts of people like James Mason Hutchings, Galen Clark, Frederick Law Olmsted, John Muir, and Theodore Roosevelt among others that the world learned of Yosemite, flocked to it, nearly destroyed it, and ultimately saved it. These fascinating characters and their remarkable stories are skillfully woven together in this beautiful volume, created expressly to capture the wonder of Yosemite and to inspire future generations to do their part for wild places.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781930238428
Publisher: Yosemite Conservancy
Publication date: 11/26/2013
Pages: 224
Sales rank: 515,238
Product dimensions: 8.40(w) x 9.90(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

About The Author
Dayton Duncan is an award-winning author and filmmaker who has served on the boards of the National Park Foundation, Student Conservation Association, and Conservation Lands Foundation. He wrote and produced the acclaimed PBS series The National Parks: America’s Best Idea, among others. This is his twelfth book. He lives in Walpole, NH.

Read an Excerpt

From the Prologue:
For me, someone more conversant in the workings
of history than environmental science, there was
a lesson the sequoias were trying to teach me. For
something as unique as the national park idea to be
born, it required a certain combination of conditions;
for the idea to survive and succeed, it needed
to evolve, while keeping most of its DNA intact. If I
wanted to understand the birth and evolution of the
national park idea, Yosemite and the Mariposa Grove
was the place to start. My understanding would be
deepened if I paused to give more thought to the life
of a sequoia, from seed to seedling to sapling to Grizzly
Giant—if I considered history as a process more
like biology than physics or mathematics, not an
orderly progression of events or an equation of additions
and subtractions but an evolution much more
organic and unruly and unpredictable. I needed to
think like a sequoia.

Table of Contents

Prologue: Seed of the Future
1. The Testimony of the Rocks
2. As Famed as Niagara
3. The Duty of Government 000
4. The Morning of Creation
5. Perversion of the Trust
6. Uncle Sam's Soldiers
7. To Last through the Ages
Epilogue: Inspiration Point
Afterword
Acknowledgments
Selected Bibliography
Credits
Index
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